West Virginia ousts Kentucky from NCAA Tournament

WVU's tough defense too much for Wildcats, 73-66

West Virginia's Devin Ebanks (3) reacts as Kentucky's Patrick Patterson (54) looks on during the second half of the final game in the East Regional of the NCAA college basketball tournament Saturday, March 27, 2010, in Syracuse, N.Y. (AP Photo/Kevin Rivoli)

It's almost heaven, West Virginia. The Mountaineers are off to the Final Four for the first time since 1959.

Joe Mazzulla scored a career-high 17 points in his first start of the season and West Virginia handled a cold-shooting Kentucky team stocked with future NBA players almost from the opening tip for a 73-66 victory in the East Regional final Saturday.

Mountaineers coach Bob Huggins, back with his alma mater, is in the Final Four for the first time since taking Cincinnati in 1992. It's an even longer stretch for West Virginia - Jerry West was the star of the team 51 years ago, and not yet a Hall of Famer or NBA logo.

The young Wildcats could have used West's famous shooting touch in this one. They were awful from 3-point range, missing their first 20 attempts and finishing a stunning 4 of 32 (12.5 percent). DeAndre Liggins finally hit a 3 with 3:29 left to end the drought, but by then it was too late.

West Virginia went the other way, making eight 3s in the first half without a 2-point basket.

It's been a turbulent time for Huggins since his previous Final Four appearance. He was forced out at Cincinnati, had a heart attack in 2002 and spent a year coaching Kansas State before he found the country roads back to Huntington in 2007.

He couldn't have imagined at the start of the tournament relying on Mazzulla to take his team to Indianapolis. Mazzulla came off the bench in 35 games this season and averaged 2.2 points - barely worth a mention in most scouting reports.

He dashed uncontested to the rim for several easy baskets. When he was out of the game, he was on all fours in front of the bench slamming the court in encouragement.

West Virginia fans chanted "Final Four! Final Four!" as the players took their spots at halfcourt after the final buzzer. Da'Sean Butler, who scored 18 points, led the Mountaineers in a little Final Four dance and they cupped their ears to the crowd.

"I talked about it being special," Huggins told the crowd. "Two more and it will be really special."

They had the stage after Kentucky had the spotlight all season. The Wildcats (35-3), who also went 16 for 29 at the free throw line, were a strong favorite to win their first national championship since 1998 once overall No. 1 seed Kansas went down in the second round.

Instead, a team loaded with NBA-caliber players - John Wall and DeMarcus Cousins among them - is left to wonder how its season ended in a whimper.

Actually, it ended in a clang.

End of the road for Kentucky freshmen?SYRACUSE, N.Y. - Say goodbye to John Calipari's fabulous Kentucky freshmen - and probably junior Patrick Patterson, too.Their season is over, and the next stop for Patterson, flashy guard John Wall and imposing center DeMarcus Cousins could be the NBA after the Wildcats' season ended with a thud. Kentucky's high-tempo offense was stymied by an intimidating West Virginia defense in a 73-66 loss in the East Regional final on Saturday.Wall and Cousins finished the game on the bench. Wall fouled out with 51 seconds left, and Cousins was on the sideline for the final three minutes because the top-seeded Wildcats needed outside shooters.The freshmen already have indicated it's their intention to enter the NBA after only one college season, barring a significant change of heart.Wall already is being pegged as a potential No. 1 pick, and the 6-foot-11 Cousins is projected to go in the first round.And Patterson, a 6-9 forward who considered entering the draft last year, also is likely to go after he spoke at length Friday about approaching every game like it's his last in college.Wall, the national freshman of the year, finished with 19 points. Cousins had 15 points and eight rebounds in 28 minutes.It was a stunning end for a team that accomplished so much while putting Big Blue back on the basketball map in Calipari's first year since taking over following Billy Gillispie's dismissal.The Associated Press